© Joe ÓNéill MLK Annual March
& Celebration San Francisco
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Monday, 21 January 2013
Tuesday, 8 January 2013
Peter Robinson – Willie Frazer - Veterans of Foreign Wars
Our two intrepid Heroes
Peter Robinson (Inset) & Willie Frazer, being restrained by the PSNI
The Minister for Justice in the Irish Republic, Alan
Shatter, has said the Gardai, (Irish Police) are ready for any eventuality that
may occur when an estimated 150 Loyalists protestors are to descend on Dublin
this Saturday, to demand that the Irish flag be removed from the Irish
Parliament Building, Leinster House.
The march is to be organised by a new grouping, “People’s
Forum” one of whose leaders, Willie Frazer, led the “Love Ulster” march in
Dublin over 6 years ago, which left a trail of looting, public disorder, and rioting
in Dublin’s city centre.
Loyalists have been protesting across Northern
Ireland since December 3, when the Belfast
City Council voted to fly the Union flag on designated days only, as opposed to
the previous policy of the year round.
Seems like in Northern
Ireland history keeps repeating itself.
First Minister in the Northern Ireland Executive, Peter Robinson, was also fond
of the odd incursion into “enemy territory”. (See his Wikipedia profile below)
Perhaps when all is said and done, this is only a case of
monkey see, monkey do.
Invasion
of Clontibret
On 7 August 1986, in protest at
the Anglo-Irish Agreement, Robinson led a group
of 500 loyalists into the village of Clontibret
in County Monaghan in the Republic of Ireland. The loyalists attacked the
unmanned Garda station in the village and daubbed loyalist
slogans on the walls. They then held a quasi-military parade along the main
street and attacked two Gardaí. More Gardaí arrived shortly after and fired shots in
the air, scattering the loyalist crowd. Robinson was arrested and held at Monaghan Garda
station. He pleaded guilty to unlawful
assembly and was fined IR£17500 in a Drogheda court
to escape a prison sentence. As a result, Robinson briefly resigned from the
DUP deputy leadership.[22]
There was also violence both before and after a court appearance in Dundalk,
including Ian Paisley being attacked with stones and petrol bombs after Jim Wells and other Robinson supporters
waved flags and sang Loyalist songs.[23]
At his trial the judge described him as "a senior extremist
politician".[24][25]
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